4.7 Article

Contrasting signatures of introgression in North American box turtle (Terrapenespp.) contact zones

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 21, Pages 4186-4202

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.15622

Keywords

adaptive divergence; ddRAD; genomic cline; hybrid zone; selection; temperature dependence

Funding

  1. Lucille F. Stickle Fund of the North American Box Turtle Committee
  2. NSF-XSEDE Research Allocation [TG-BIO160065]
  3. American Turtle Observatory
  4. Bruker Professorship in Life Sciences
  5. Twenty-First Century Chair in Global Change Biology
  6. Arkansas High Performance Computing Cluster

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Hybridization occurs differentially across the genome in a balancing act between selection and migration. With the unprecedented resolution of contemporary sequencing technologies, selection and migration can now be effectively quantified such that researchers can identify genetic elements involved in introgression. Furthermore, genomic patterns can now be associated with ecologically relevant phenotypes, given availability of annotated reference genomes. We do so in North American box turtles (Terrapene) by deciphering how selection affects hybrid zones at the interface of species boundaries and identifying genetic regions potentially under selection that may relate to thermal adaptations. Such genes may impact physiological pathways involved in temperature-dependent sex determination, immune system functioning and hypoxia tolerance. We contrasted these patterns across inter- and intraspecific hybrid zones that differ temporally and biogeographically. We demonstrate hybridization is broadly apparent inTerrapene, but with observed genomic cline patterns corresponding to species boundaries at loci potentially associated with thermal adaptation. These loci display signatures of directional introgression within intraspecific boundaries, despite a genome-wide selective trend against intergrades. In contrast, outlier loci for interspecific comparisons exhibited evidence of being under selection against hybrids. Importantly, adaptations coinciding with species boundaries inTerrapeneoverlap with climatic boundaries and highlight the vulnerability of these terrestrial ectotherms to anthropogenic pressures.

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